Monday, June 25, 2007

My Drug Story: Part 1: Genesis

BECAUSE A LOT OF PEOPLE HAVE ASKED this and because it's a complex tale to tell (with an extended flirtation in the beginning spanning several years until I ever became familiar enough with it ever to feel casual enough around heroin to become a daily user ... I have a lot of memories to sort through in my head, a lot of remeniscences I'd actually really rather forget. And a lot of explaining to do: to myself, really, not to you. but it's all a tangle and prising the bundled-up lot of it undone and laying it out in chronologial order let alone summoning the sense to explain half of it is going to take some doing. And though I may find myself doing this; I'm rather loathe to post in two or more parts (stop press: I'm going to have to...) unless so doing definitely makes sense ... (stop press: it does ...)

So please bear with me as I dig (it's a complicated history with all manner of stop-starts in the beginning) dig deep shovel my muck out and try to make at least some sense out of how the squarest boy in my class at school could wind up a decade later as an injecting heroin addict. Whilst the others are settled down, married homeowners with kids, careers and divorces under their belts: all the normal stuff. I must pause and ask the question: How did this happen to me~??

Actually (and think of how bizarre is this!?) I was an inpatient in a mental hospital when an item came on the evening news about drugs programmes in women's prisons. And who should they feature? But the same little girl (a grown woman now, of course) ~ hair dyed but definitely the same person and looking good considering ... who I used to walk to primary school with for a time ... Here she was, in prison for a three-year stretch. Why? Because of the same stuff that had pretty much put me in hospital: heroin. Just like me she was a junkie. They say at NA that addiction's an illness with a chronic course whose ends are always the same: jails, institutions and death... Death, the last of these, has taken too many people I've known. Jail I've avoided by stubbornly refusing to get involved in dodgy schemes. So it was the "institutions" that got me ... Living with a mad woman I'd met on the street it didn't take too long till I went crazy myself ...

*

GENESIS. HOW IT ALL BEGAN:
I FIRST HEARD OF "DRUGS" aged about 13.
Leafind through a 1960s medical text I came across a write-up of the substances available at the time: " ... LSD, amphetamines, barbiturates, cocaine ... heroin ... " I don't remember reading about the dreaded "pot". But it must have been there. It was never around me and so never an issue.

In my teens drugs were taken by scruffy, rough people who I had nothing to do with. And the drugs of choice (this was 1980s rural Wales) seemed to be cannabis (back then ~ mosty hash I'd guess) and magic mushrooms. These grew in profusion in the Welsh countryside and hit the local "cat pu tree" newspapers when police raided scruffy hippies' caravans, pulling out hundred of the dried little "liberty caps" into daylight ...

Aparently the local cows and sheep graze these, standing wide-eyed at their water troughs and watching faeries dancing on top as the world goes paisley-patterned by (or whatever it is tripping livestock see ...) They get very territorial voer their mushroom patches and will aggressively shoo away hapless humans who come to pick their stashes ...

So anyway I took no drugs at all at school. Between tehn and university my one experience of drugs was watching some Dutch guitar-strumming musicians passing a herbal ciggie to and fro in France. I suppose I must have known what was in it, but cannabis never held any appeal to me. Unlike most people, I suppose, the idea that a drug was "weak" made it less appealing. If I was going to try anything, I wanted something strong!

When I went off to university everything changed when a girl form my course, who looked like Daryl Hannah, asked if I'd ever tried ecstasy. Just looking at me the answer was so obviousy "no" but she invited me to a party that weekend nonetheless.

A couple of days beforehand we made an appointment for me to try a spliff. I duly turned up armed with notebook and pen (such a student! I don't know why we didn't set up a reel-to-reel tape recording as well to really immortalize the experience! Seriously!!)

Cannabis, it transpired, was just a cigarette that made me dizzy. To try proper drugs, I'd have to wait till that weekend ...

***

And here endeth part one. Seriously: remembering ... You don't know how tiring this is!!

***

to be continued ...

27 comments:

  1. There, but for the grace of God, go I.

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  2. There but for the grace of God goes everyone I think!!

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  3. Good luck with the detoxing - hope it goes OK.
    I wish you through the other side of it , and safe.

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  4. This is totally irrational, but I sometimes feel jealous of people who do drugs in their youth and then get over it.

    I never smoked, never did drugs - just didn't really have any reason to want to, was aware of the risks and the kids I hung around with weren't into it.

    And all my adult life I jogged.

    Then at age 37 I come down with a progressive illness - thirteen years and counting. So I figure I should have gotten wasted more as a youth... ?

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  5. This is real soul searching stuff, I look forward to the next instalment.

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  6. Lippy: Thanks. I'm not even booked in for it yet... have to sort out local government funding 1st ... then find a rehab to follow on from the detox ... ho-hum ...

    Yeah but Paul I never got over it... read the story till the end!

    Ellee: this time tomorrow. I'm scribbling it on paper as we speak ... (well kind of ...) ...

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  7. Lippy has anyone told you you might possibly be wearing too much make-up ... "LOL" "LOL" "LOL" ... wow imagine turning up to the solicitors' office lookin' like that ... is that why u blog in disguise??!?

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  8. Everyone on "Madonna's" blog says "LOL" when they fear they might have offended her royal harness .../unemployed guy in East End of London with Madonna fantasty prob./whatever

    I'm convinced the blogging "Madonna" is 1. male and 2. british bc he gets American terms wrong like attourney = barrister not solicitor. Also he dropped himself in it by declaring Madonna had read ,Harry Potter and the Hen-Pecked Giblets when everyone knows no-one but no-one save Her (J. K. Rowling's) editor and agent get to read said novel ahead of publication ... ho-hummmmmm.

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  9. oh maybe attorney doesn't mean that but hey ... think of those Henpecked Giblets ... out at a bookstore near you very soon!

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  10. It's all too easy to get sucked in.....thank goodness you are letting us all know the perils/hurt/anguish etc and hopefully!!! how to pull yourself out of it all.
    Rx
    to Paul; maybe you wouldn't have seen 37 if you'd turned to drugs...many don't. Wishing you the best that can be under the circumstances you're in.

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  11. yup Ruth ...and it's to be continued tomorrow (well I've barely started yet!)

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  12. Man,do I RELATE. I often write in my journal, trying to get my entire story out, parts of my past, and it is exhausting.

    Interestingly, I always felt the exact same way as you: if it's just some weak, silly drug, like Robo-tripping (what the kids over here do with Robitussin) or weed, I don't want it. Drugs should be STRONG. That's the attitude with which I started my habit too.

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  13. Whoa. I've never been tempted to experiment. I can be a real anal control freak. Shit, I hated being under anaesthesia for my dental surgery! The thought of being totally incapable of controlling my body freaks me the hell out.

    Of course, my control-freakness is also probably one more reason why I've never had the big "O", so...

    I guess you win some and lose some, eh?

    Best of luck with the detox. Have you thought of picking up something else to do? Am I being a complete dork by suggesting crochet, knitting or yoga? (God, I LOVE yoga.)

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  14. As tiring as remembering is, thank you for sharing with us XOXOXO

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  15. It is tiring Gledwood and it also takes courage to write as openly honestly and frankly as you do here. I admire you and wish you continuing strength and courage in any decisions you make.

    Thank you for sharing and raising my awareness.

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  16. Tiring but courageous, Gleds. Keep telling us about it...I think the pitfalls should be made known...but some will always try for themselves, won't they? Hopefully it's a bit cathartic for you, too.

    Hugs

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  17. Hi Gledwood,
    I'm looking forward to reading Part II (and beyond). You might inspire me to write about my own initiation into drugs...

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  18. Wishing and hoping you make it to the other side finally. It must be awful. Thanks for writing about it. Your sheep scene amidst the mushrooms gave me a chuckle.
    As for margaritas...yeah, they`re quite popular here. Frozen usually into a nice lime sweet and sour slush. I could get addicted to them very easily, but tequila`s too expensive to drink very often.

    tea
    xo

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  19. Cheers for commenting on my blog again... yeah, it was a rainy weekend down here too. Anyway, thanks for sharing that post with people, i look forward to the next installment... i think your honesty is real good and helpful for others. I completely understand how tiring remembering is though.

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  20. Fascinating stuff Gleds. But if you find this tiring, don't continue my friend. Give yourself a break. Hugs to you.

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  21. Easy to start but hard to stop. I really hope you get the funding.

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  22. This must be very difficult for you. I can't imagine. I hope that being able to blog about your feelings will help you beat your addictions.

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  23. memo to self: twominutesthirtyseconds.blogspot!

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  24. OK folks: part II is comin' up shortly ...

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  25. hey thanks for sharing your story! it may be hard but I definitely want to know the rest!

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  26. It is very tiring ... I've just spent ... well it was "only" 45 minutes typing out that "part 2" post but man! how exhausted I am!!

    There but for the grace of God goes anyone who is more sensible than me!

    Thanks for the messages everyone!

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  27. I heard it this way: alcohol leads to only three things: death, jail, or insanity. Then it was alcohol and drugs lead to only three things . . .

    What is spliff? A joint (marijuana cigarette)?

    I am slowly making my way through the story. It is spell-binding.

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